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What is the Trump Organization? [A Holding Company & Trade Name]


“The Trump Organization” is a trade name (also known as a DBA or fictitious name) that multiple business entities associated with Donald Trump use. For example, on December 6, 2022 two business entities (“THE TRUMP CORPORATION” and “THE TRUMP PAYROLL CORPORATION”) that both used “THE TRUMP ORGANIZATION” DBA were convicted of criminal charges (yes, business entities can be convicted of crimes).

“The Trump Organization” is also part of the real name of multiple business entities (e.g. “THE TRUMP ORGANIZATION, INC.” registered in New York state and “THE TRUMP ORGANIZATION LLC” registered in Delaware).

Finally, to add one more element of confusion, “The Trump Organization” is also a trademark registered by Donald Trump and owned by “DTTM OPERATIONS LLC”).

Unfortunately, almost all of Trump’s companies are privately owned which means there is very limited information available about which ones are subsidiaries of other ones. Most likely, one of the companies actually named “THE TRUMP ORGANIZATION INC” or “THE TRUMP ORGANIZATION LLC” is the holding company for most of the others, but we don’t know that for sure.

What we do know is that in 2015 as part of his presidential bid, Donald Trump submitted financial disclosures (OGE Form 278e) to the Federal Election Commission (FEC) which disclosed 515 business entities (LLCs, corporations, partnerships, and trusts) in which he held positions.

These disclosures are limited and don’t reveal the parent-subsidiary or other structures that relate many of the entities, but they do show the legal complexity of the organization. The annual state filing fees just to maintain 500 business entities are over $50,000.

The beneficial owners for most of the Trump Organization entities are Donald J. Trump and/or the Donald J. Trump Revocable Trust dated April 7, 2014.

Organization History

The organization was originally founded in 1927 as a residential real estate development company in Queens, by Donald Trump’s paternal grandmother, Elizabeth Christ Trump, and his father, Fred Trump, under the name “E. Trump & Son”.

Donald Trump officially joined the company in 1968, and by the 80’s, he had pivoted the company from residential real estate into hotels, casinos, and other ventures.

The company has been controversial for decades, from a 1973 lawsuit against the company for violating the Fair Housing Act, to a 1989 fine for missing basic financial records and violating generally accepted accounting principles, to hundreds of accusations of not paying contractors for services rendered, to convictions of two subsidiaries for criminal tax fraud in December of 2022.

Note: This diagram is an artistic illustration of The Trump Organization’s structure. The actual structure is not known since the companies involved are private and have released minimal records to the public.

11 Startup Business Ideas that use ChatGPT


GPT-3 empowered startups like Jasper (an AI copywriter) to reach tens of millions of dollars in revenue within 2 years of launching. OpenAI (the company behind GPT-3) just released a new AI model a few days ago: ChatGPT. Like its predecessor, ChatGPT creates new opportunities for startups. In this article, I describe 11 startup ideas that entrepreneurs could launch using ChatGPT.

Example of a ChatGPT interaction

1. Airbnb Host Messaging

Airbnb hosts need to be very responsive when communicating with guests and potential guests. That can be difficult, however, especially for hosts with multiple properties. Some hosts use automated chat bots, but these existing chat bots have limitations and don’t generally provide the same quality of experience to guests as a human would. Other hosts outsource messaging to the Phillipines, Jamaica, or other countries with cheap English-speaking labor. ChatGPT has the potential to disrupt both of those solutions with an AI-powered Airbnb messaging product that is both extremely cheap and high quality. Guests could be responded to within seconds every time.

2. Business phone automation

Automated phone systems have become the norm for many businesses. Call CVS for example, and you’ll be routed through repeated iterations of “press 1 if you are a doctor, press 2 for hours, press 3 for prescription status, press 4 to speak to a member of Congress”. That’s not a pleasant experience for customers. ChatGPT could potentially be used to route callers much more quickly and efficiently to the information or person they need. The basic pipeline would use three modules:

  1. Speech-to-text
  2. ChatGPT text response generation
  3. Text-to-speech

3. Shopping assistant SaaS

Make a chat-based shopping assistant saas product that online stores could use to help their site visitors express what they are looking for and discover matching products offered by that store.

4. Tinder trainer

Make a Tinder chat simulator that men can use to practice Tinder chat conversations with the goal of improving their conversational skills. The value proposition is to help men enhance their ability to go from Tinder match to real date.

5. VC pitch feedback simulator

Make a tool for entrepreneurs to simulate pitching a VC or angel investor. The value proposition would be for entrepreneurs to gain confidence, learn what type of questions to expect from a VC during a pitch, and learn overally how to pitch more effectively.

6. Public speaking simulator

Teach people to be better public speakers by training them with AI feedback. The user would speak into a microphone, and an AI audience (powered by ChatGPT) would generate questions and comments that the speaker-user would have to respond to. This speaking experience would be done in virtual reality.

7. Negotiation simulator

Teach people to negotiate by putting them through simulations with ChatGPT-powered adversaries. Simulate business negotiations, hostage negotiations, lease negotiations, etc.

A variant of this idea would be to build the negotiation simulator as a game rather than a training device. The negotiation game could simulate hostage negotiations, geopolitical negotiations, etc. However, to make the game idea work, you’d have to substantially modify ChatGPT since it is currently trained to not engage in violent discussions.

8. Software development agency

Sell your services to develop custom websites or mobile apps, but use ChatGPT to generate lots of the necessary code so that you can undercut competitors on price, deliver faster, and still have a larger profit margin than competitors. Sell your services to old-school small businesses like real estate brokerages, roofing contractors, restaurants, etc since it will take years if not decades for those types of businesses to be willing to use AI products directly.

9. Help bot development agency

Create a software development agency that builds AI help chatbots for SaaS companies. For each client, you would fine-tune a version of ChatGPT on that client’s database of previous client interactions (e.g. the interactions from their help desk emails).

10. Video game conversation engine

Build a SaaS product that allows game developers to add sophisticated AI conversational ability to any NPC with a single line of code.

CAVEAT: This probably wouldn’t be a very high-moat product.

11. OnlyFans message responder

OnlyFans content creators can be inundated with messages. Often, message responses are delegated to an assistant. However, a ChatGPT-based responder could be just as high of quality and much cheaper. To make this work, however, you would need to modify ChatGPT to be able to have explicit conversations.

14 Examples of Niche Industry Blogs


Niche, industry-specific blogs punch far above their weight in terms of revenue per website visitor. The reason is that these blogs are read by professional decision-makers in those niche industries, and marketers which want to sell products or services to businesses in those industries need to reach those highly-specific audiences of decision-makers. In this article, I list 14 examples of niche industry blogs.

1. confectionerynews.com

This blog focuses on daily news in the confectionery (candy) industry. Last month, the site received 81,600 visits (26.5% from the U.S. and 16.7% from the U.K.).

2. socialmediatoday.com

This blog covers news and trends in social media, for an audience of content creators, advertisers, and other social media professionals. The site received 1.20 million visits last month (29.9% from the U.S. and 7.8% from the U.K.).

The company monetizes through lead gen (via sign up forms for free webinars), sponsored posts about the sponsoring company, paid press releases, and ads. Press releases cost $239-269 each.

3. ipwatchdog.com

This blog focuses on the business, policy, and substance of patents and other forms of intellectual property. IP lawyers are some of the highest paid lawyers, so this blog will have a very high-value audience. The blog is monetized in several ways:

  • Selling a 50+ hour video course on patent law for new attorneys for $1995
  • An IP job board where a job listing can be posted for 60 days for $199
  • Selling event sponsorships (with lead-gen opportunities from event registrants)

The site received over 143,000 visits (58.6% from the U.S.) during the month of October, 2022.

4. hedgeweek.com

This hedge fund news blog received 81,600 visits last month (33.7% from the U.S. and 26.1% from the U.K.) with top organic non-branded search terms including “crypto hedge fund europe”, “investment vehicle offshore”, “crypto hedge fund by aum”, and “scion asset management”.

The site uses free webinar sign up forms to collect data of hedge fund industry professionals (likely sold as lead gen to fund managers and service providers). Additionally, the site is monetized through:

5. privateequitywire.co.uk

Owned by the same company as hedgeweek, Private Equity Wire is a blog focusing on the institutional private equity industry. The site received 84,900 visits last month (33.5% from the U.K. and 30.9% from the U.S.)

Top non-branded organic search terms last month included “vistaar finance warburg pincus”, “atlantic business international owner”, “private equity”, “plural vc”, and “clearlake concert golf”. Monetization methods for the site are similar to those on its sister blog hedgeweek.com.

6. insurancejournal.com

This blog features business news for the property & casualty insurance industry. Last month, the site received 310,000 visits (over 80% from the U.S.), and the site also runs a newsletter with 100,000 subscribers.

The site is monetized with ads, a job board, a business directory, and sponsors (e.g. links to “carriermanagement.com” and “mynewmarkets.com” are anchored to the top of each page of the website).

7. journalofaccountancy

This blog for accounting professionals received 574,000 visits last month (66% from the U.S.). The site is monetized with advertising, a vendor (business) directory, and lead gen through forms that gate free downloadable reports.

8. wastedive.com

This blog provides news and analysis for waste and recycling executives. The site received 74,900 visits last month (74% from the U.S.).

The site is monetized through paid press releases ($239-269 each) and advertising.

9. constructiondive.com

This blog has news and analysis for the construction industry. The site received 200,000 visits last month (82% from the U.S.). This website is owned by the same company as wastedive.com, and monetization is done the same way.

10. mining.com

This blog covers the global mining industry, and last month the site generated 1.14 million visits. The site is monetized with ads, a partnership (either affiliate links or some other type of monetized relationship) with edumine courses, a job board, and a “buyer’s guide” which is really just a place for companies to advertise their mining-related products and services with short posts.

11. dailycoffeenews.com

This blog covering coffee industry news generated 154,000 visits last month. The site is monetized with ads and a job board running on a separate url (coffeeindustryjobs.com).

However, there are some obvious opportunities I see to enhance the blog’s monetization:

  • The site has product posts, but doesn’t appear to use affiliate links.
  • The site has a form to allow free submission of press releases rather than charging for press releases like some of the other niche industry blogs on this list.
  • The site has a calendar of industry events but doesn’t appear to encourage vendors to pay to add free, form-gated webinars that could be used as a form of lead-gen.

12. sportbusiness.com

This blog covers sports business news and generated 141,000 visits last month (31% from the U.K. and 17.5% from the U.S.).

The site is monetized with a paid database of sports’ sponsorship deal data and various other data and analytics products around the sponsorship markets. The site also runs ads and offers consulting.

13. adweek.com

This blog covers the advertising and media industry. Site traffic last month was 2.20 million (59% from the U.S.). This blog is actually the digital companion of the Ad Week magazine which was first published in 1979.

14. bevnet.com

This beverage industry blog generated 245,000 visits last month (70% from the U.S.). The blog is monetized in several ways:

  • A job board
  • A buyer’s guide (i.e. a directory of industry vendors)
  • A marketplace of vendors (which seems basically the same as the buyer’s guide but with a different interface)
  • Selling BevNET-hosted live events (e.g. there is a Live Winter 2022 2-day event in California where tickets are listed for $1,399)
  • Selling event sponsorships
  • Selling a subscription membership called “Insider” that gets you discounts on live events, free virtual events, and networking opportunities
  • Advertising

For a blog this size, the monetization is very impressive.

8 Biggest Companies Headquartered in Virginia [by 2022 Revenue]


These are the 8 largest companies headquartered in Virginia, as ranked by total revenue over the 4 quarters ended September 30, 2022.

1. Raytheon Technologies ($66.03 Billion)

Raytheon Technologies (NYSE: RTX) moved its headquarters from Massachusetts to Arlington in 2022. The company is an aerospace and defense contractor that generated $66 billion in revenue over the last 4 quarters.

Official Company NameRAYTHEON TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION
State of IncorporationDelaware
Headquarters Address1000 Wilson Blvd
Arlington, VA 22209
Corporate Phone Number781-522-3000
Last Annual Report10-K
Last Quarterly Report10-Q
Investor Relations WebsiteInvestor Relations

2. Boeing ($61.42 Billion)

Boeing (NYSE: BA) is an airplane designer & manufacturer which moved its headquarters from Chicago, Illinois to Arlington, Virginia in 2022. The company operates in four reportable business segments:

  • Commercial Airplanes (BCA) — Develops, produces, and markets commercial jet aircraft and provides fleet support services.
  • Defense, Space & Security (BDS) — Researches, develops, produces, and modifies manned and unmanned military aircraft and weapons systems.
  • Global Services (BGS) — Provides services to commercial and defense customers. Services include logistics management, engineering, maintenance and modifications, upgrades and conversions, spare parts, pilot and maintenance training systems and services, technical and maintenance documents, and data analytics and digital services.
  • Boeing Capital (BCC) — Provides financing to Boeing customers to purchase Boeing products.

Total revenue over the last 4 quarters was $61 billion.

Official Company NameTHE BOEING COMPANY
State of IncorporationDelaware
Headquarters Address929 Long Bridge Drive
Arlington, VA 22202
Corporate Phone Number703-414-6338
Last Annual Report10-K
Last Quarterly Report10-Q
Investor Relations WebsiteInvestor Relations

3. Performance Food Group ($55.23 Billion)

Performance Food Group (NYSE: PFGC) is a wholesale food distributor with 142 distribution centers that serve over 300,000 customers across the U.S. Customers include independent and chain restaurants, schools, businesses, hospitals, vending distributors, office coffee service distributors, retailers, convenience stores, and theaters. Also, in addition to food products, the company offers knowledge services to its customers to assist with product selection and procurement, menu development, and operational strategy. Total revenue was $55 billion.

Official Company NamePerformance Food Group Company
State of IncorporationDelaware
Headquarters Address12500 West Creek Parkway
Richmond, VA 23238
Corporate Phone Number804-484-7700
Last Annual Report10-K
Last Quarterly Report10-Q
Investor Relations WebsiteInvestor Relations

4. Mars ($45 Billion)

Mars is a candy and pet food company and is the fourth largest privately owned company in the U.S. by revenue, generating $45 billion in annual sales. The company owns M&M’s, Life Savers, Twix, Snickers, Milky Way, 3 Musketeers, Pedigree, Iams, Greenies, Whiskas, and many other brands. The company has also been buying a ton of pet hospitals.

Headquarters Address6885 Elm St
McLean, VA 22101
Corporate Media Phone NumbersMars Directory
Latest Financial News ReleaseCompany News Article
WebsiteCompany Website

5. General Dynamics ($38.85 Billion)

General Dynamics (NYSE: GD) an aerospace, marine, and defense company that generated $39 billion in revenue over the last 4 quarters. The company is organized into four operating segments:

  • Aerospace — Producing Gulfstream business jets, operating a global FBO network, and offering aircraft management and support services for individuals and corporations.
  • Marine Systems — Designing and building nuclear-powered submarines, surface combat ships, and auxiliary ships for the U.S. Navy. Additionally, the segment includes ongoing services related to the maintenance and modernization of these ships.
  • Combat Systems — Manufacturing wheeled and tracked land combat vehicles, weapon systems, and munitions.
  • Technologies — Serving military and civilian customers with solutions that combine hardware and specialized software.

The latter three are considered the “defense segments” of the company.

Official Company NameGENERAL DYNAMICS CORPORATION
State of IncorporationDelaware
Headquarters Address11011 Sunset Hills Road
Reston, VA 20190
Corporate Phone Number703-876-3000
Last Annual Report10-K
Last Quarterly Report10-Q
Investor Relations WebsiteInvestor Relations

6. Capital One Financial ($35.87 Billion)

Capital One is a diversified financial services holding company with banking and non-banking subsidiaries. The company uses three reporting segments:

  • Credit Card
  • Consumer Banking
  • Commercial Banking

Total revenue was $36 billion.

Official Company NameCAPITAL ONE FINANCIAL CORPORATION
State of IncorporationDelaware
Headquarters Address1680 Capital One Drive
McLean, VA 22102
Corporate Phone Number703-720-1000
Last Annual Report10-K
Last Quarterly Report10-Q
Investor Relations WebsiteInvestor Relations

7. Northrop Grumman ($35.21 Billion)

Northrop Grumman (NYSE: NOC) is an aerospace and defense company whose principal customers are the U.S. Department of Defense and intelligence community. Total revenue was $35 billion.

Official Company NameNORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION
State of IncorporationDelaware
Headquarters Address2980 Fairview Park Drive
Falls Church, VA 22042
Corporate Phone Number703-280-2900
Last Annual Report10-K
Last Quarterly Report10-Q
Investor Relations WebsiteInvestor Relations

8. CarMax ($33.67 Billion)

CarMax (NYSE: KMX) is the largest U.S. retailer of used cars. Total revenue was $34 billion.

Official Company NameCARMAX, INC.
State of IncorporationVirginia
Headquarters Address12800 Tuckahoe Creek Parkway
Richmond, VA 23238
Corporate Phone Number804-747-0422
Last Annual Report10-K
Last Quarterly Report10-Q
Investor Relations WebsiteInvestor Relations

15 Recession-Resistant Business Ideas for 2024


A recession-resistant business is one which has little to no drop in revenue during recessions. Here are 15 recession-resistant business ideas for people who want to start their own company.

1. Crematorium

Recessions don’t reduce death rates. That means demand for death care services is recession-resistant. However, not all death care business models are equally good opportunities. Cemeteries and traditional burial-focused funeral homes have been losing market share almost every year for the past several decades. On the other hand, cremation has been growing in market share for those same decades.

If I started a crematorium today, I would simultaneously pursue three methods of getting customers:

  1. I would build a business TikTok account with a mix of educational and emotional/uplifting content about how to deal with the death of a family member. I would have a link in the TikTok bio to my website where people could purchase cremation services (including body pickup and direct-to-your-door delivery of ashes).
  2. I would reach out to all nursing homes and hospitals within a certain radius of my crematorium facility and attempt to establish partnerships (possibly with paid referrals) where they would recommend my crematorium to families who lost someone.
  3. I would reach out to all funeral homes within a certain radius of my crematorium and offer my services to them if they didn’t have an in-house crematorium.

If you want to go the extra mile in your business, there is a newer and lesser known type of cremation known as “aquamation” which you could offer in place of or in addition to traditional cremation. Check out this article for a discussion of the economics, cultural trends, and laws related to aquamation.

2. Online urn seller

Whether its the ashes produced by traditional cremations or the bone powder produced by aquamations, demand for urns is growing at the same rate as demand for cremations and is just as recession-resistant. In fact, demand for some types of “alternative” urns such as necklace urns has grown even faster.

Over the past 10 years, google search interest for “cremations” has roughly tripled while search interest for “necklace urns” has increased roughly 5x. If I were going to start an urn business today, I would focus on urn necklaces before branching into more traditional urns as well. As with the crematorium business, I would focus my marketing efforts on TikTok (organic and paid ads). I might also try Facebook paid ads.

As for the urns themselves, you could start with dropshipping, although I think you’d likely have more luck going organically viral on TikTok if you make (or at least customize) the urn necklaces yourself. TikTokers love “behind the scenes” type content from small businesses that show how their products are being made.

3. Candy company

Candy is cheap and comforting. That means when people get stressed out (e.g. from a recession), they don’t really pull back on candy consumption. If we look at the graph of net sales from the company that makes tootsie rolls, we can see that sales didn’t really drop after either the dot com bubble or the great recession.

If we look at net sales from the Hershey Company, we see an even more pronounced disregard for recessions.

The idea then is to create a new candy (ideally chocolate since it has mildly addictive properties) brand. You can probably guess how I would launch this new brand: TikTok. There has already been one viral candy video that launched a brand of supposedly aphrodisiac chocolates.

4. Alcoholic beverage brand

Like candy and chocolate, alcohol consumption does not decrease during times when people are more stressed out. You can clearly see this in the chart below of total u.s. retail sales of beer, wine, and liquor stores.

Source: FRED

The opportunity then is to create a new branded alcoholic beverage like the Rock’s Teremana Tequila, Ryan Reynolds’ Aviation Gin, or Conor McGregor’s “Proper No. Twelve Irish Whiskey”. This strategy is ideal if you are already a beloved celebrity. If you aren’t, you’ll have to be much more creative with your marketing and distribution strategies.

5. HVAC contractor

If you live in a sunbelt state like Florida or Texas, you know that you’d pay anything an AC repairman asks when your air conditioning stops working in August. Living in humid 90 degree weather is utterly miserable, which means the demand for AC repairs is very inelastic. Recession or no recession, people will pay for air conditioning. That means an HVAC contracting business in a place like Boca Raton, Fort Lauderdale, Tampa, Houston, or Austin is an extremely recession-resistant business (especially if you focus on repairs and replacements rather than new home installations).

Bonus Tip: If you are a copywriter or marketer living in south Florida and don’t want to run an HVAC business yourself, consider focusing your existing marketing business on acquiring HVAC contractors as customers. Since they are recession-resistant, you will be too if they are the majority of your customers. That strategy is actually way more general than just marketing and copywriting. You could offer any product or service to any recession-resistant business, and the result will be a recession-resistant business. For example, you could offer bookkeeping for crematoriums, marketing services for alcohol brands, etc.

This strategy isn’t perfect. If you are a digital marketer who serves HVAC contractors and then a recession hits, other digital marketers who used to serve real estate brokers may switch to focusing on the HVAC contractors who still have business, and that increased competition may force down your margins and profits. However, you’ll still be far better off as the marketer who was already serving HVAC contractors than the one who had to switch from serving brokers to contractors.

6. Subscription dog-walking service

People don’t spend any less money on pets during recessions. You can clearly see this resilience in the aftermath of the dot com bubble, during the financial crisis, and during covid in the chart below.

That means businesses that sell products or services for pets should see little to no detrimental effects from a recession. One of the easiest types of pet businesses to start is a dog walking business. You can start off walking the dogs yourself, and little to no money is needed to get started. You can go knocking door to door around your local area to find initial customers, or you can spend $50 and leave nice business cards at all the houses. You can also use Rover to find dog walking customers.

As a variation on the traditional dog walking business, I would try selling subscriptions to walk a dog every weekday with payment upfront for each month. That makes the revenue more predictable and also gives you some extra time value of money.

As you grow your set of customers, you can start hiring additional dog walkers. I would try to get to a point where I can assign three dog walkers to each customer. Why three? Because three is both few enough that the customer can be comfortable and familiar with each one, yet also a large enough number to reasonably ensure that at least one of them is always available (which is critical for the subscription model to work and is one of the main value propositions for why someone would opt to pay for a subscription over a one-off, as-needed dog walking business model).

7. Aquamation for pets

Pets are becoming more common, and unfortunately that also means pet death is becoming more common. How do you dispose of a dead pet? Well, one way is through aquamation. The money needed to start a pet aquamation business is much less than the money needed to start a human aquamation business, and the regulations are less stringent also.

To get customers, you could use TikTok and Google SEO with blog articles that answer questions about dead or dying pets.

You could even enhance your revenue further by also selling neckace and other urns for pet ashes.

8. Dog resort

Airbnb sounded like a crazy idea when it was founded, but then it took off. After a few years, it evolved from people just renting out their spare bedroom to people buying and building entire properties just to rent out on Airbnb.

Rover is sort of like Airbnb for dogs. Anyone can sign up as a pet sitter to take care of dogs or cats in their home for a nightly rate. I use Rover every time I travel because I feel like my dog will have a better experience than they would in a kennel, and I pay a premium for that ($50/night). However, the “professionals” haven’t yet come to Rover in the same way they have to Airbnb which means there is an opportunity to be an early mover. Build a custom property with multiple “private rooms” for dogs.

These rooms don’t need running water or plumbing which makes them much cheaper to build than a house or apartment unit. Build 5-10 units on one property and then host dogs for $50/night, each with their own private room. You can take each of them out to play for a period of time, and of course you need to walk them. Eventually, you could hire staff to run the resort. The profit margins of this business have the potential to be much higher than Airbnb margins, and this business also taps into the recession-resistant pet industry money.

9. Pet dental treats

As yet another way to tap into the recession resistant pet industry, you could manufacture healthy dental treats for dogs, cats, hamsters, or other pets. There are existing competitors in this space, but if you are good at marketing (e.g. through TikTok) you could make this work. This type of business is also great because if you design the treats for daily (or nightly) use, the revenue should be recurring. In fact, you could even sell subscriptions where you send pet owners a set of 30 treats every month or 90 treats every 3 months.

10. Natural, green dog shampoo

This is another pet industry marketing play. Create a natural, environmentally-friendly, and healthy dog shampoo. Since there are competitors, the way to make this work is through great marketing.

11. Doctor’s office

People pay for healthcare whether the economy is good or bad. Part of the reason why is that people need to be healthy enough to work regardless of the economy. Another part of the reason is that much of healthcare is actually paid for by insurance companies or the government. But regardless of reason, just look at the chart below which shows health expenditures in the U.S. by year. Note how recessions appear to have zero impact on the growth rate of spending.

That recession resistance means that doctor offices are very recession-resistant businesses. If I were a doctor with my own practice right now, I would also take advantage of TikTok for marketing. There are a few doctors on TikTok who have been very successful in going viral and driving traffic to their websites, but the space still is very new, and there is plenty of opportunity for doctors to market their services via TikTok.

12. Phone automation for doctors’ offices

We just established that doctor’s offices are recession resistant businesses. That means a non-commodity business that sells primarily to doctor’s offices will also be recession resistant. For example, sticky saas (software-as-a-service) products built for doctors’ offices would be very recession resistant. A great example of a sticky saas product for a doctor’s office is phone automation software.

You know how when you call a doctor, you are routed through a maze of automated “press 1 if you are new patient who is looking to schedule an appointment, press 2 if you are an established patient with an upcoming appointment, press 3 if you have a pimple in armpit,” etc?

We’ve all experienced those frustrating mazes, so help doctors do better. Make a visual-audio hybrid interface that allows users to more quickly navigate the maze, use AI to cut down on the number of steps required to navigate the maze, or use any other strategy to make the phone system less annoying to doctors’ customers. Doctors have lost my business before because I lost patience with the phone system, and that’s not unique to me. Doctors’ offices lose patients and money from bad phone automation systems. Make a better solution.

NOTE: South Florida is a great market to build a product like this since it is a fast-growing area where demand is outstripping the supply of doctors, and since there are lots of retirees (with lots of health problems) moving in each year in need of a new doctor.

NOTE 2: You could also build a phone automation system for pharmacies like CVS.

13. Transparent physician billing

When you go to the doctor, you often don’t know how much your bill will be until after services have already been rendered. There are many reasons for that (e.g. legal requirements for doctors to treat some types of patients without regard to whether or not they can pay, doctors outsourcing the business management and billing to other companies who then negotiate with insurance companies after the fact, legal and ethical issues around which situations are emergent and therefore which situations the patient should be given a choice of treatment, etc).

These are big problems, and there is no simple solution. However, if you could solve even a small piece of the problem for specific patients in specific situations, you might have a billion dollar finance or fintech business. Transparent billing that helps patients be able to shop prices and make price-informed decisions about service providers and services rendered is a massive opportunity for anyone with the guts and wits to tackle it.

14. Hospital cybersecurity services

Cybersecurity is a sticky product. That means as long as the customers you target don’t go out of business, they will probably keep paying. Hospitals (and especially non-profit hospitals) likely will continue to do just fine during a recession. That means you should also be able to continue selling cybersecurity to them during a recession.

Last year, a security breach of CommonSpirit Health (the second-largest nonprofit U.S. hospital chain) affected facilities in at least 4 states. This is just one example of the growing cyber threat to healthcare organizations. Help these organizations mitigate that threat.

15. Government software development contractor

A software development agency builds custom software for clients. You might be building databases, mobile apps, websites, ML models, dashboards, or some other type of software system. Mobile apps and websites are the easiest place to start since there are lots of small businesses willing to pay thousands or tens of thousands of dollars to have a website or app built for them. They may also pay you hundreds or thousands of dollars each month just to maintain the website or app as well. That’s a great business.

However, things get even better when you consider government contracting. The federal government, all 50 state governments, all 3000+ county governments, and even city governments hire contractors for all sorts of work from landscaping to catering to software development. At the federal level, there are even legal requirements for the government to give a certain amount of contract money to small businesses so you don’t have to compete with Microsoft.

If you have had at least 1 small business client for software development, then you can probably also get a government contract if you are willing to put in the time and paperwork. The payoff for that time and paperwork is a VERY stable source of income (a government contract).

The federal and state governments are the most recession-resistant customers you could ever hope for. They will continue to pay you no matter what the economy is doing. You can find current and upcoming federal contracts on sam.gov (and each state and local government will have their own similar system for finding contract opportunities).

19 Niche websites with over 10 million visitors per month


Niche websites can be fantastic businesses. In this article, I list 19 examples of successful niche websites that each get over 10 million visits per month.

1. jobs2careers.com

Search for jobs of any type in any location in the U.S. The site got 13.84 million visits in October, 2022.

2. techradar.com

This tech blog has hi-fi, home cinema, and tech news, reviews, buying advice, and deals. The site received 32.07 million visits last month.

3. digitaltrends.com

Digitaltrends.com is a tech blog with news and reviews on smart phones, earbuds, computers, tablets, TV’s, and VPN’s. The site’s owners were even opportunistic enough to add Wordle articles. Monthly site traffic is 18.86 million visits.

4. moneysavingexpert.com

A personal finance blog with articles about phone plan deals, discount programs, loyalty programs, how to control your spending, how to budget in retirement, and other money topics. Site traffic was 23.95 million visits last month.

5. cardgames.io

Play checkers, chess, backgammon, cribbage, farkle, gin rummy, solitaire, or many other card, board, or dice games online.

6. realsimple.com

This site is an everything blog (movies, shopping, gift ideas, beauty guides, cocktail recipes, how to host a party, home decorating tips, etc). Site traffic was 11.30 million.

7. freepik.com

Download images for free. Site traffic was 77.55 million last month.

8. freecodecamp.org

Learn to code for free, and earn certifications. Monthly traffic was 23 million.

9. whattoexpect.com

This pregnancy blog has articles on what to expect and how to navigate pregnancy. The site also has a community you can join to connect with other new parents. Monthly site traffic is 13.63 million visits.

10. babycenter.com

This pregnancy website has articles on baby names, baby health, getting pregnant, navigating pregnancy, and raising young children. Site traffic last month was 23.35 million.

11. thecut.com

This fashion trend blog for women gets over 13 million monthly visits.

12. thechive.com

This random website has funny pictures, memes, and videos. It also brought in 18.59 million visits in October, 2022.

13. theconversation.com

A general information blog covering politics, science, history, and more. The site was founded by a group of universities with the goal of putting out nearly academic quality coverage of areas that have a lot of misinformation. Site traffic last month was 19.03 million visits.

14. thedodo.com

The dodo is a feel-good blog with endearing stories about animals. Monthly site traffic is 14.56 million.

15. thedrive.com

This is a car news, tech, and culture blog, with a subdirectory (thedrive.com/the-war-zone) dedicated to military news and tech. The site received 14.94 million visits last month.

16. genius.com

This website has one of the largest collections of song lyrics in the world and gets over 100 million monthly visits.

17. thespruceeats.com

This food blog gets over 26 million monthly visits.

18. goodreads.com

This community-driven book review site received over 111 million visits last month.

19. horoscope.com

This site provides free horoscopes and received 15.39 million visits last month.

Detailed statistics on web traffic for each of the 19 sites listed are provided in the table below.

WebsiteMonthly Visits
(Oct 2022)
Top Visitor CountriesTop Non-Branded
Organic Search Terms
1jobs2careers.com13.84 MillionUS (99%)“indeed”

“jobs near me”

“work from home jobs”
2techradar.com32.07 MillionUS (31%)
UK (17%)
Canada (4%)
“free vpn”

“best free vpn”

“prime day”
3digitaltrends.com18.86 MillionUS (42%)
UK (5%)
Canada (5%)
“overwatch 2 account merge”

“should i upgrade to windows 11”

“windows 11 vs windows 10”

“rtx 4090”
4moneysavingexpert.com23.95 MillionUK (96%)
US (1%)
“tax calculator”

“martin lewis”
5cardgames.io26.02 MillionUS (72%)
Canada (12%)
UK (5%)
“hearts”

“spades”

“solitaire”

“yahtzee”

“hearts online”
6realsimple.com11.30 MillionUS (79%)
Canada (4%)
UK (3%)
“ring size chart”

“ring size”

“how to measure ring size”

“party games”
7freepik.com77.55 MillionIndia (13%)
Brazil (11%)
Indonesia (6%)
US (5%)
8freecodecamp.org23.00 MillionUS (16%)
India (9%)
Brazil (3%)
“python substring”

“for i in range python”
9whattoexpect.com13.63 MillionUS (65%)
Canada (5%)
UK (5%)
“due date calculator”

“gender neutral names”

“unisex names”

“best prenatal vitamins”
10babycenter.com23.35 MillionUS (46%)
Brazil (13%)
UK (5%)
“due date calculator”

“baby names”
11thecut.com13.02 MillionUS (61%)
UK (6%)
Canada (6%)
“the watcher”

“adam levine”

“kanye west”

“trevor noah”
12thechive.com18.59 MillionUS (63%)
Canada (11%)
UK (6%)
“boobs”
13theconversation.com19.03 MillionUS (26%)
Australia (19%)
UK (7%)
“45”

“liz truss”

“ukraine”
14thedodo.com14.56 MillionUS (68%)
Canada (7%)
UK (4%)
“loki”

“ukraine dog”

“wet his bed”

“halloween”

“monkey”
15thedrive.com14.94 MillionUS (59%)
Canada (6%)
UK (6%)
16genius.com101.3 MillionUS (36%)
Russia (5%)
UK (5%)
“unholy lyrics”

“snow on the beach lyrics”

“bigger than the whole sky lyrics”
17thespruceeats.com26.18 MillionUS (68%)
Canada (8%)
UK (6%)
“brunswick stew”

“best instant coffee”

“fried chicken recipe”

“highball”

“risotto”
18goodreads.com111.6 MillionUS (42%)
UK (6%)
Canada (5%)
“quotes”
19horoscope.com15.39 MillionUS (52%)
Canada (9%)
UK (7%)
“horoscope”

“horoscope today”

“daily horoscope”

“virgo daily horoscope”

“magic 8 ball”

If you want more ideas for niche website businesses, check out these other articles: